Sorry for no responses, just got back to internetting.
more like breaking records in awesomeness
Not gonna lie, that's an awesome movie, and Breaking Bad may have paid homage to it in that scene. There's a lot of homages and references in Breaking Bad, but you have to be paying attention because they are subtle and feel natural. Nothing like Star Trek Into Darkness, where the entire movie was "Remember when they did this in Wrath of Khan? Let's do it again, but reverse the characters and make it shitty."
Never seen it. Have heard it was really good though. Until I have a chance to watch it though, I'll need more arguments than just "X was better". Why was it better? What is at the very root of it that could possibly speak to the truth about the human condition better than the tragic rise and fall of Walter White?
As an MST3K fan I am obligated to argue otherwise.
I'll need more arguments than just "X was better". Why was it better? What is at the very root of it that could possibly speak to the truth about the human condition better than the tragic rise and fall of Walter White?
Creo que están mal escritas "Metástasis".
I've heard Metastasis (the Spanish remake) is pretty awesome and I intend to watch it too as part of my spergathon, but Breaking Bad is better because it's in English, which
@Brad Watson_Miami says is the true language of G_D/7_4.
My Little Pony is much more complex and mature.
Never watched, I'm not a 7-year old girl.
Breaking Bad? More like Breaking Edge.
John Titor? More like John TitsorGTFO.
Lost was a JJ Abrams thing, right? See Star Trek Into Darkness. Also, I remember everyone complaining about how Lost just got more confusing and unnecessarily complicated as the show went on and ended without wrapping a lot of stuff up. On Breaking Bad, the show had a natural progression that, while it went in some unexpected directions, always made sense with the overall story. And the story ended well. Because Vince Gilligan has a background in film, he has a clear idea of beginning, middle, and end, and the show plays out much like a very extended movie. It's basically the Great American Novel told in long form television.